The condemned soldiers, in a statement they issued through their counsel, Mr Femi Falana (SAN) argued that sending them to go and confront heavily armed Boko Haram terrorists without providing them with adequate weapons was asking them to go and commit suicide. They said their refusal to obey orders of the Commanding Officer of the Special Forces Battalion, Lt. Colonel Opurum, was as a result of non-availability of arms and ammunition to prosecute the instruction of the commander.
According to Falana’s
statement, “Yesterday (Wednesday), the General Court-Martial sitting in Abuja
which tried another batch of 59 soldiers for conspiracy to mutiny and mutiny
convicted 54 of the accused persons and sentenced them to death while five were
discharged and acquitted. “The acquittal was designed to give the false
impression that the dubious verdict was fair and just. The soldiers were in the
Special Forces 111 Battalion which has 174 instead of 750 soldiers.
The soldiers in the
Battalion were neither equipped nor motivated. They are young men whose ages
range between 21 and 25. Most of them joined the army in 2012.“With little or
no training whatsoever they were deployed to fight the dreaded Boko Haram sect.
The funds allocated for payment of the salaries and allowances of the soldiers
and for purchase of arms and ammunition are usually diverted and cornered by
corrupt military officers.
Instead of bringing such
unpatriotic officers to book, the military authorities have engaged in the
diversionary tactics of wasting the lives of innocent soldiers by sentencing
them to death without any legal justification.
On July 9, 2014, the Boko
Haram sect launched a ferocious attack on the battalion. As the soldiers were
ill-equipped and ill-motivated the well-armed terrorists killed three officers
and 23 soldiers and inflicted serious injuries on 82 others.
While sympathizing with the
bereaved soldiers, the army authorities assured them that adequate weapons
would be provided to match the sophisticated weapons of the Boko Haram
sect.“But without the provision of the said weapons the soldiers were ordered
on August 4, 2014 to recapture Delwa, Balubulin and Damboa in Borno State from
the Boko Haram terrorists.
The soldiers demanded for
weapons so as not to lose more officers and men in the circumstance. A few
soldiers who embarked on the suicidal mission together with the Commanding
Officer were ambushed by the Boko Haram troops.“When some weapons were made
available on August 8, 2014, the soldiers moved to the battlefront, dislodged
the satanic Boko Haram sect and liberated their captured colleagues and
officers. They were commended for their bravery and sacrifice. But for some
inexplicable reasons, the army authorities ordered that the soldiers be charged
with mutiny for allegedly exposing the armed forces to embarrassment by asking
for weapons.
In the judgment delivered
yesterday, the court-martial refused to consider the evidence led in court and
convicted 54 of the soldiers for having the temerity to ask for weapons to
carry out the task of defending the territorial integrity of the nation.
Since the soldiers were
justified in refusing to commit suicide, the verdict which is characterised by
gross miscarriage of justice will not stand. Apart from the fact that the
prosecution did not lead any scintilla of evidence to prove the two-count
charge of conspiracy and mutiny against any of the convicts the court-martial
did not consider the defence of the soldiers in any material particular.
Convinced that soldiers who
made a legitimate demand for equipment to fight the insurgents cannot, by any
stretch of imagination, be properly convicted for mutiny, we shall take all
necessary legal measures to prevent the army authorities from giving effect to
the genocidal verdict of the court-martial.”
Falana nailed it, how dare them punnished by death.
ReplyDeleteYou must make sure the death penalty is not carried out
ReplyDelete